English

Multimodality in Group Communication Research

Human-Computer Interaction 2024-01-30 v1

Abstract

Team interactions are often multisensory, requiring members to pick up on verbal, visual, spatial and body language cues. Multimodal research, research that captures multiple modes of communication such as audio and visual signals, is therefore integral to understanding these multisensory group communication processes. This type of research has gained traction in biomedical engineering and neuroscience, but it is unclear the extent to which communication and management researchers conduct multimodal research. Our study finds that despite its' utility, multimodal research is underutilized in the communication and management literature's. This paper then covers introductory guidelines for creating new multimodal research including considerations for sensors, data integration and ethical considerations.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2401.15194,
  title  = {Multimodality in Group Communication Research},
  author = {Robin Lange and Brooke Foucault Welles and Gyanendra Sharma and Richard J. Radke and Javier O. Garcia and Christoph Riedl},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2401.15194},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

27 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T14:28:40.232Z